It also says that a surveillance camera at another storage facility caught Foreman carrying a bag that “could contain millions in $100 bills or bearer bonds.” But the picture that is shown in that section of the story is actually a still from a surveillance video in the Banner Thunderbird Medical Center in Glendale, Arizona, showing Jason Matthew Bristol allegedly smuggling his 2-day-old daughter out of the hospital in a plastic shopping bag in 2015.

The main photo with the story is also unrelated to Missouri — it shows an FBI agent talking to an upstate New York sheriff’s officer at the start of a child abuse investigation in 2016.

The story originated on a site called Ladies of Liberty, which is part of a network of sites that describe themselves as satirical and have disclaimers that say, “Everything on this website is fiction.”

Another clue that the story isn’t true is the author’s bio, which says, “Loreli Eagleton is the wife of Flagg Eagleton. She is a stay-at-home Mom of 7 who loves to make sandwiches and does what she’s told — until she doesn’t!” The photo shown next to the bio is of a woman in lingerie wielding a pistol in each hand. It was actually taken by Peter Kim, a Vancouver-based photographer who creates stock images like that one.

Kim told us in an interview that his work is sometimes lifted from various websites where the images are for sale. “The ones with the guns seem to get stolen the most,” he said.

Editor’s note: FactCheck.org is one of several organizations working with Facebook to help identify and label viral fake news stories flagged by readers on the social media network.